Regulatory Guide 5.26: Difference between revisions

From kanterella
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
(StriderTol Bot change)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Adams
{{Adams
| number = ML13350A206
| number = ML003740041
| issue date = 06/30/1974
| issue date = 04/30/1975
| title = Selection of Material Balance Areas and Item Control Areas
| title = Selection of Material Balance Areas & Item Control Areas
| author name =  
| author name =  
| author affiliation = US Atomic Energy Commission (AEC)
| author affiliation = NRC/RES
| addressee name =  
| addressee name =  
| addressee affiliation =  
| addressee affiliation =  
Line 10: Line 10:
| license number =  
| license number =  
| contact person =  
| contact person =  
| document report number = RG-5.026
| document report number = RG-5.26 Rev 1
| document type = Regulatory Guide
| document type = Regulatory Guide
| page count = 7
| page count = 7
}}
}}
{{#Wiki_filter:June 1974 U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
{{#Wiki_filter:U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION  
                            REGULATORY
REGULATORY GUIDE
                            DIRECTORATE OF REGULATORY STANDARDS
OFFICE OF STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT
                                                                                                                          GUIDE
REGULATORY GUIDE 5.26 SELECTION OF  
                                                              REGULATORY GUIDE 6.26 SELECTION OF
MATERIAL BALANCE AREAS AND ITEM CONTROL AREAS
                            MATERIAL BALANCE AREAS AND ITEM CONTROL AREAS


==A. INTRODUCTION==
==A. INTRODUCTION==
2. The assignment of responsibility to a single designated individual for the control of the material or Proposed (38 FR 26735) Section 70.58,                                       the items in each area could provide more vigilant and
Section 70.58, "Fundamental Nuclear Material Con trols," of 10 CFR Part 70, "Special Nuclear Material,"
"Fundamental Nuclear Materal Controls," of 10 CFR                                 effective control in each area and thus in the total plant.
requires certain licensees authorized to possess more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material to establish Material Balance Areas (MBAs) or Item Control Areas (ICAs) for the physical and administrative control of nuclear materials. This section requires that:
1. Each MBA be an identifiable physical area such that the quantity of nuclear material being moved into or out of the MBA is represented by a measured value.


Part 70, "Special Nuclear Material." would require                                  3. The capability for detecting the loss or theft of certain licensees authorized to possess more than one                              material may be improved by taking smaller material effective kilogram of special nuclear material to establish                        balances.
2. The number of MBAs be sufficient to localize nuclear material losses or thefts and identify the mechanisms.


Material Balance Areas (MBAs) or Item Control Areas                                                                                          !
3. The custody of all nuclear material within an MBA or ICA be the responsibility of a single designated individual.
(ICAs) for the physical and administrative control of                              Number of MBAs and ICAs nuclear materials. This section would require that:
 
                                                                                          The number of MBAs and ICAs established at a
4. ICAs be established according to the same criteria as MBAs except that control into and out of such areas would be by item identity and count for previously determined special nuclear material quanti ties, the validity of which must be ensured by tamper safing unless the items are sealed sources.
1. Each MBA be an identifiable physical area such that                            plant will depend on considerations that are specific to the quantity of nuclear material being moved into or out                            the individual plants. Such consideratiors will have a of the MBA can be measured.                                                        bearing on the definition of the word "sufficient" in the
 
2. A sufficient number of MBAs be established so that                              Part 70 requirement that the number of MBAs and ICAs nuclear material losses, thefts, or diversions can be                              be sufficient to localize losses or thefts. It is not the localized and the mechanisms identified.                                          number of MBAs or ICAs per se that will be sufficient to
This guide describes bases acceptable to the NRC
3. The custody of all nuclear material within an MBA                               localize losses but the division of the plant into MBAs be thevresponsibility of a single individual.                                     and ICAs using bases for such division which will permit
staff for the selection of material balance areas and item control areas.
4. ICft be established according to the same criteria as                           identification and location of losses. Among the most MBAs except that control into and out of such areas                               significant considerations for establishing MBAs are would be by item identity and count for previously                                 detection capability, physical boundaries, and the determined special nuclear material quantities.                                   organizational structure to provide administrative control in each area. Other factors which may pertain This guide describes bases acceptable to the                               include material types, processes and process layout, and Regulatory staff for the selection of material balance                             functional locations such as laboratories, shipping and areas and item control areas.                                                      receiving areas, or storage areas.


==B. DISCUSSION==
==B. DISCUSSION==
Each of these factors will affect the selection of MBAs and ICAs and the effectiveness of such selecti- n The division of a nuclear plant into material balance                       to control material and items and to identify losses areas and item control areas can provide improved                                 within an area. For example, if an MBA is selected to material control and accounting as follows:                                       consist of a building in which there are two processes using different material types (such as two different
The division of a nuclear plant into material balance areas and item control areas can provide improved material control and accounting as follows:  
1. A loss or theft of material or of an item or items can                         enrichments of uranium), there may be some difficulty be identified as having occurred in a particular part of                          in identifying to which enrichment a MUF should be the plant so that the investigation can be more effective                          applied. If each process (probably in separate rooms in and the loss or th.-ft mechanism more easily identified                            the building) is established as an MBA, MUFs for each and corrected or counteracted.                                                    process could be identified, and losses or thefts from USAEC REGULATORY GUIES                                      deafred oftopublished Copi          the US.guides  mayEergy Atomic  be obtalned bv f owW
1. A loss or theft of material or of an item or items can be identified as having occurred in a particular part  
                                                                                                                          Commlsson,    Washington,  D.C. d*
*Lines indicate substantive changes from previous issue.
                                                                                                                                          Indlatina the      lon
                                                                                                                                                          2**45, Ragulatory Guides we issued to deasolbe and make "table to the PUNlc            Atte- Ion: DlrWcto of Raguleory Standards. Comments end uggestlons for methods acoeptable to the AEC Regulatory staff of Iniple10ntlng specific parts of ImWove        t in theU Uldea we encouraged and should be sent to t- Sacmreary the C,*moisAim's regulatiom, to delineae tedclnques used by the staff In          of the Commlislon. US. Atomic Energy Commisslon. Washington, D.C. 20545, minsuigar@Pecific probiwa or postulated accidesnt, or to provide qulde"        to Ation: Chief, Public ProAednp Staff.


wrfoetn alimn. Regulatory Guido amnot subaltum for repulatioms end wkh shem I not reqvurad Methods and solutkio doffa!rnt from tho m out In          The guils w Issued In the following ton broad divisiom:
of the plant so that the investigation can be more effective and the loss or theft mechanism more easily identified and corrected or counteracted.
tdo qds    wIIIbe amcsable If they Povide a boi fOr the findines Ntqulta to                                                6. ProTd i the         ofCorntina of epermit or Neon" by the ComgHIsio


====n.     ====
2. The assignment of responsibility to a single desig nated individual for the control of the material or the items in each area could provide more vigilant and effective control in each area and thus in the total plant.


===1. Po    AestwIT===
3. The capability for detecting the loss or theft of material may be improved by taking smaller material balances.
                                                                                              rs
                                                                                  2. ffesemrch and To"t Reectota           


===7. Transportation===
Number of MBAs and ICAs The number of MBAs and ICAs established at a plant will depend on considerations that are specific to the individual plants. Such considerations will have a bearing on the definition of the word "sufficient" in the Part 70 requirement that the number of MBAs and ICAs be sufficient to localize losses or thefts. It is not the number of MBAs or ICAs per se that will be sufficient to localize losses but the division of the plant into MBAs and ICAs using bases for such division that will permit identification and location of losses. Among the most significant considerations for establishing MBAs are detection capability, physical boundaries, and the organizational structure to provide administrative con trol in each area. Other factors that may pertain include material types, processes and process layout, and func tional locations such as laboratories, shipping and receiving areas, or storage areas.
                                                                                    3. FueswandMattei Facl*tlies            8. Occupational Health Publised          win be rrAed peatodiaffy,     s appropriate, to eoomua  odo    4. Emolton,, nteY  l atidSiing            9. Anttrut Rasniw comnn      nd oreflct new Informatinto Ot exOiemene.                              S. Maaislh and Plent Protection        1


===0. Gensral===
Each of these factors will affect the selection of MBAs and ICAs and the effectiveness of such selection to control material and items and to identify losses within an area. For example, if an MBA is selected to consist of a building in which there are two processes using different material types (such as two different enrichments of uranium), there may be some difficulty in identifying to which enrichment a MUF should be USNRC REGULATORY GUIDES
Comments should be sent to the Secretary of the Commission. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Washington. D.C. 20555. Attention: Docketing and Regulatory Guides are issued to describe and make available to the public Service Section.


.each process could be evaluated and investigated as                quantity for a detectable loss or theft. A LEMUF that needid. In this case,-the process and the material type            has been inflated, either intentionally or inadvertenify, provided a definition of the MBA. It would not be                  can mask a loss or theft by indcating that a MUF is not necessary for different types of material to be used in           statistically significant, i.e., the MUF is the result only of the two processes for them to be established as separate          the measurement error of the sstem, when in fact the MBAs. Two parallel processes using the same type of                MUF includes a significant loss or theft. The material might be separate MBAs as shown in Cases II              ramifications of the evaluation of MUF bnd the and V in Appendix A. Division also might be made                  generation of data for MUF and I ZMUF are the subjects within a process to establish MBAs that would improve              of other regulatory guides. it is sufficient for the detection capability for separate parts of the process.            purpose of this guide to know that the combination of a properly generated MUF and LEMUF provides a loss It may be possible to make the conversion step of a          detection mechanism.
methods acceptable to the NRC staff of implementing specific parts of the Commission's regulations, to delineate techniques used by the staff in evalu, The guides are issued in the following ten broad divisions:
ating specific problems or postulated accidents, or to provide guidance to appli.


fuel fabrication process a separate MBA with a measured balance around it. The remainder of the process steps                  In general, the detection c.,pability of MUF and (the fabrication steps, pelletizing, sphere formation,            LEMUF varies directly with the quality of the material alloying, and any other) could constitute another MBA              balance measurements and inversely with the quantity of up to the point where the nuclear material is sealed in a          material in a given balance. In this context, detection fuel pin, rod, etc. After sealing, the material could be          capability means the threshold quantity of material that treated as an identifiable item and sent to another area          the system can detect as being missing with some stated for storage or for further fabrication such as welding,          probability. This capability is represented by a LEMUF
cants Regulatory Guides are not substitutes for regulations, and compliance
assembly, or testing. Transfer of the items from the              value stated in terms of quantity, e.g., grams or MBA would be based on the material quantities as                  kilograms. Thtis detection capability based on a measured measured when the items were loaded.                              material balance is associated with MBAs rather than ICAs, since ICAs are controlled on an item basis. In an If the linal fabrication area or storage area receives      ICA either all items are accounted for or they are not. If fuel from more than one loading MBA or is in a separate            they are not, one or more missing items are indicated, building on the plant site, it would be designated as an          and an investigation is required.


ICA using item identity and the measured quantitites from the loading MBAs for control.                                     The selection of MBAs can affect detection capability by lowering the quantity of material in a It also may he that the conversion step of the              material balance, thereby lowering the absolute LEMUF,
===1. Power Reactors ===
process is not administratively separated from the rest of        since with less material there could be a smaller LEMUF
6. Products with them is not required Methods and solutions different from those set out in
the process so that it could not be considered a separate        and a greater sensitivity. This assumes that only the MBA. This would not preclude a measured balance                  quantity of material is changed and not measurement around that step if the produic from the step were                quality.
2. Research and Test Reactors
7 Transportation the guides will be acceptable if they provide a basis for the findings requisite to
3 Fuels and Materials Facilities
8 Occupational Health the issuance or continuance of a permit or license by the Commission.


measurable before it went into the subsequent step of the process. With proper control of the material to                    Examples showing the effect of this quantity change assure that all is measured once and only once as it              using this assumption are presented in Appendix A of moves from process step to process step, measured                  this guide. The examples obviously are sinplified internal material balances can be taken around process            greatly. In real situations there would be complicating segments whose inputs and outputs are measurable even              factors such as discard streams, scrap removals from though separate MBAs may not be established.                      MBAs, recycle that might cross MBA boundaries, or uneven distribution of inventory or throughput between Detection Capability                                              MBAs, in addition to changes in measurement quality.
4. Environmental and Siting
9 Antitrust Review Comments and suggestions for improvements in these guides are encouraged
5 Materials and Plant Protection
10 General at all times, and guides will be revised, as appropriate, to accommodate cow mtents and to reflect new information or experience This guide was revised as a Copies of published guides may be obtained by written request indicating the result of substantive commerts received from the public and additional staff divisions desired to the U.S Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Washington. 0 C
review
20555. Attention. Director. Office of Standards Development Revision 1 April 1975


Each of these could affect the selection of MBA
applied. If each process (probably in separate rooms in the building) is established as an MBA, MUFs for each process could be identified, and losses or thefts from each process could be evaluated and investigated as needed. In this case, the process and the material type provided a definition of the MBA. It would not be necessary for different types of material to be used in the two processes for them to be established as separate MBAs. Two parallel processes using the same type of material might be separate MBAs as shown in Cases II
      The basic objectives of material balance accounting          boundaries.
and V in Appendix A. Division also might be made within a process to establish MBAs that would improve detection capability for separate parts of the process.


for special nuclear material are to detect the occurrence of missing material whether it be lost or stolen, and             Physical Boundaries conversely to provide assurance with a stated degree of confidence that if any material is missing it is less than a           The physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs are not threshold quantity. A prime indicator for attaining these         specified in the proposed regulations except that they objectives is Material Unaccounted For (MUF). The base             must be "identifiable physical areas." The boundaries for evaluation of a MUF value is the Limits of Error of           .zould be no more than lines painted on the floor around the Material Unaccounted For (LEMUF). If a MUF value             certaiyi parts of the process. However, if MIBA or ICA
It may be possible to make the conversion step of a fuel fabrication process a separate MBA with a measured balance around it. The remainder of the process steps (the fabrication steps, pelletizing, sphere formation, alloying, and any other) could constitute another MBA
is within the LEMUF value, it can be stated with a                 boundaries do not minimize the possibility of specified probability that the MUJF is due to                     intermixing of materials or items from different areas, uncertainties of the measurement system. The validity of           either intentionally or inadvertently, the balance of such this statement depends on a number of factors, a major            an area or the item control for such an area could one of which is the validity of the LEMUF itself. The              become meaningless, and the location of a loss or theft LEMUF provides the limits which define the threshold              of material or items might not be identifiable. Further.
up to the point where the nuclear material is sealed in a fuel pin, rod, etc. After sealing, the material could be treated as an identifiable item and sent to another area for storage or for further fabrication such as welding, assembly, or testing. Transfer of the items from the MBA would be based on the material quantities as measured when the items were loaded.
 
If the final fabrication area or storage area receives fuel from more than one loading MBA or is in a separate building on the plant site, it would be designated as an ICA using item identity and the measured quantities from the loading MBAs for control.
 
It also may be that the conversion step of the process is not administratively separated from the rest of the process so that it could not be considered a separate MBA. This would not preclude a measured balance around that step if the product from the step were measurable before it went into the subsequent step of the process. With proper control of the material to ensure that all is measured once and only once as it moves from process step to process step, measured internal material balances can be taken around process segments whose inputs and outputs are measurable even though separate MBAs may not be established.
 
Detection Capability The basic objectives of material balance accounting for special nuclear material are to detect the occurrence of missing material whether it be lost or stolen, and conversely to provide assurance with a stated degree of confidence that, if any material is missing, it is less than a threshold quantity. A prime indicator for attaining these objectives is Material Unaccounted For (MUF). The base for evaluation of a MUF value is the Limits of Error of the Material Unaccounted for (LEMUF). If a MUF  
value is within the LEMUF value, it can be stated with a specified probability that the MUF is due to uncertain ties of the measurement system. The validity of this statement depends on a number of factors, a major one of which is the validity of the LEMUF itself. The LEMUF provides the limits that define the threshold quantity for a detectable loss or theft. A LEMUF that has been inflated, either intentionally or inadvertently, can mask a loss or theft by indicating that a MUF is not statistically significant, i.e., the MUF is the result only of the measurement error of the system, when in fact the MUF includes a significant loss or theft. The ramifica tions of the evaluation of MUF and the generation of data for MUF and LEMUF are the subjects of other regulatory guides. It is sufficient for the purpose of this guide to know that the combination of a properly generated MUF and LEMUF provides a loss detection mechanism.
 
In general, the detection capability of MUF and LEMUF varies directly with the quality of the material balance measurements and inversely with the quantity of material in a given balance. In this context, detection capability means the threshold quantity of material that the system can detect as being missing with some stated probability. This capability is represented by a LEMUF
value stated in terms of quantity, e.g., grams or kilograms. This detection capability based on a measured material balance is associated with MBAs rather than ICAs, since ICAs are controlled on an item basis. In an ICA, either all items are accounted for or they are not. If they are not, one or more missing items are indicated, and an investigation is required.
 
The selection of MBAs can affect detection capabil ity by lowering the quantity of material in a material balance, thereby lowering the absolute LEMUF, since with less material there could be a smaller LEMUF and a greater sensitivity. This assumes that only the quantity of material is changed and not measurement quality.
 
Examples showing the effect of this quantity change using this assumption are presented in Appendix A of this guide. The examples obviously are simplified greatly. In real situations there would be complicating factors such as discard streams, scrap removals from MBAs, recycle that might cross MBA boundaries, or uneven distribution of inventory or throughput between MBAs, in addition to changes in measurement quality.
 
Each of these could affect the selection of MBA
boundaries.
 
Physical Boundaries The physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs are not specified in the proposed regulations except that they must be "identifiable physical areas." The boundaries could be no more than lines painted on the floor around certain parts of the process. However, if MBA or ICA
boundaries do not minimize the possibility of inter mixing of materials or items from different areas, either intentionally or inadvertently, the balance of such an area or the item control for such an area could become meaningless, and the location of a loss or theft' of material or items might not be identifiable. Further.


5.26-2
5.26-2


h with boundaries that do not provide physical separation           out of, and within the area can be maintained to the of materials It is more difficult to discharge the custodial     extent that material assigned to a given area is kept responsibility for a given area. It is too easy for material     separate from material assigned to any other area. The to be moved without the proper documentation and                 boundaries of the MBAs must be established so that the appropriate transfer of custodial responsibility in such         quantity of material moving into or out of an area can cases. Areas bound by walls, such as separate buildings           be represented by a measured value. The boundaries of or rooms within a building, or by grids, such as a storage       ICAs must be established so that items moving into or crib or a room divider, are well defined and the materials       out of an area can be controlled by identity, count, and and items can be kept within the areas more easily.              a previously measured valid special nuclear material content.
with boundaries that do not provide physical separation of materials, it is more difficult to discharge the custodial responsibility for a given area. It is too easy for material to be moved without the proper documentation and appropriate transfer of custodial responsibility in such cases. Areas bounded by walls, such as separate buildings or rooms within a building, or by grids, such as a storage crib or a room divider, are well defined and the materials and items can be kept within the areas more easily.


The critical factor is not the physical boundary, but the identification of an area which can be administratively controlled as a separate area around             Detection Capability which either measured material balance control or item control can be maintained. This control would be related               Material flows and inventories and the quality of the to the three aspects of improved material conteol and            measurement of such flows and inventories should be accounting noted in the beginning of the Discussion               given primary consideration in establishing material section of this guide, i.e., loss location, responsibility       balance areas. Model material balances similar to those assignment, and detection capability. The boundaries             of Appendix A should be prepared to evaluate the selected will depend on combinations of considerations           effects of the selection of various MBAs. Such model of these three items.                                            balances should include all of the material flow, inventory, and measurement factors thai will affect the Item Control Areas (ICAs)                                        balance. Such factors would include recycle, discards, scrap inventory, random and systematic error effects, ICAs are differentiated from MBAs to simplify and          common measurements and their covariant effect, and improve the control and accountability of identifiable          changes in measurement or inventory quality as a result items. Control into and out of ICAs is required to be by        of division of flows or inventories.
The critical factor is not the physical boundary, but the identification of an area that can be administratively controlled as a separate area around which either measured material balance control or item control can be maintained. This control would be related to the three aspects of improved material control and account ing noted in the beginning of the Discussion section of this guide, i.e., loss location, responsibility assignment, and detection capability. The boundaries selected will depend on combinations of considerations of these three items.


item identity and count and previously determined special nuclear material quantities. This excludes items               Material balance areas should provide the maximum that do not have an identity that will differentiate them       practicable detection capability consistent with other from other similar items, e.g., loose fuel pellets or             factors such as physical boundaries or process operation unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM. Such items               and layout. To improve detection capability, could be substituted for other similar items of different         consideration should be given to changes in such things SNM content or the SNM content changed so that                   as process layout or process operations, physical control of the material would not be maintained.                boundaries, measurement techniques, and inventory Loaded and sealed fuel rods or tamper-safed sealed                techniques. Consideration also should be given to containers of SNM that have been numbered or in some            establishing procedures for material balances around way uniquely identified provide assurance that the                process segments internal to MBAs.
Item Control Areas (ICAs)
ICAs are differentiated from MBAs to simplify and improve the control and accountability of identifiable items. Control into and out of ICAs is required to be by item identity and count and previously determined special nuclear material quantities. This excludes items that do not have an identity that will differentiate them from other similar items, e.g., loose fuel pellets or unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM. Such items could be substituted for other similar items of different SNM content or the SNM content changed so that control of the material would not be maintained.


quantity of contained SNM remains as previously measured. ICAs for the handling and storage of such             Number of MBAs and ICAs items provide control without the need for making additional measurements for material balances. Storage                 The number of MBAs and ICAs established in a areas for finished fuel rods or assemblies, process               s-ecific plant should be based on considerations of intermediates, or irradiated fuel assemblies could be             detection capability and the physical and functional ICAs. Shipping and receiving areas could be considered           aspects of the plant and material that would assist in ICAs if item integrity is maintained in those areas.              identifying and localizing material losses or thefts.
Loaded and sealed fuel rods or tamper-safed sealed containers of SNM that have been numbered or in some way uniquely identified provide assurance that the quantity of contained SNM  
remains as previously measured. ICAs for the handling and storage of such items provide control without the need for making additional measurements for material balances. Storage areas for finished fuel rods or assemblies, process intermediates, or irradiated fuel assemblies could be ICAs. Shipping and receiving areas could be considered ICAs if item integrity is maintained in those areas.


==C. REGULATORY POSITION==
==C. REGULATORY POSITION==
Different material should be processed in separate MBAs.
A variety of factors that are specific for individual plants and processes pertain to the establishment of MBAs and ICAs. The effectiveness of the MBAs and ICAs in enhancing nuclear material control should be evaluated for each situation. The factors presented below should be considered in the selection and estab lishment of MBAs and ICAs.


A variety of factors that are specific for individual plants and processes pertain to the establishment of                  The establishment of separate processes as separate MBAs and ICAs. The effectiveness of the MBAs and                  MBAs should be considered. Although detection ICAs in enhancing nuclear material control should be              capability may not thereby be improved, the evaluated for each situation. The factors presented              identification and location of losses or thefts would be.
Physical Boundaries Physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs should be established so that control of the material moving into, out of, and within the area can be maintained to the extent that material assigned to a given area is kept separate from material assigned to any other area.'.The boundaries of the MBAs must be established so that the quantity of material moving into or out of an area can be represented by a measured value. The boundaries of ICAs must be established so that items moving into or out of an area can be controlled by identity, count, and a previously measured valid special nuclear material content.


below should be considered in the selection and                  Even when separate processes are not Maintained as establishment of MBAs and ICAs.                                   separate MBAs, separate material balances should be taken around each process to identify and locate losses Physical Boundaries                                              and possibly to enhance detection capability.
Detection Capability Material flows and inventories and the quality of the measurement of such flows and inventories should be given primary consideration in establishing material balance areas. Model material balances similar to those of Appendix A should be prepared to evaluate the effects of the selection of various MBAs. Such model balances should include all of the material flow, inven tory, and measurement factors that will affect the balance. Such factors would include recycle, discards, scrap inventory, random and systematic error effects, common measurements and their covariant effect, and changes in measurement or inventory quality as a result of division of flows or inventories.


Physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs should be                   Functional areas such as laboratories, receiving and established so that control of the material moving into,         shipping areas, and warehouses or storage vaults should
Material balance areas should provide the maximum practicable detection capability consistent with other factors such as physical boundaries or process operation and layout. To improve detection capability, considera tion should be given to changes in such things as process layout or process operations, physical boundaries, measurement techniques, and inventory techniques.
                                                              5.26-3


b with boundaries that do not provide physical separation          out of, and within the area can be maintained to the of materials it is more difficult to discharge the custodial      extent that material assigned to a given area is kept responsibility for a given area. It is too easy for material      separate from material assigned to any other area. The to be moved without the proper documentation and                  boundaries of the MBAs must be established so that the appropriate transfer of custodial responsibility in such          quantity of material moving into or out of an area can cases. Areas bound by walls, such as separate buildings          be represented by a measured value. The boundaries of or rooms within a building, or by grids, such as a storage        ICAs must be established so that items moving into or crib or a room divider, are well defined and the materials        out of an area can be controlled by identity, count, and and items can be kept within the areas more easily.              a previously measured valid special nuclear material content.
Consideration also should be given to establishing procedures for material balances around process seg ments internal to MBAs.


The critical factor is not the physical boundary, but the identification of an area which can be administratively controlled as a separate area around              Detection Capability which either measured material balance control or item control can be maintained. This control would be related                Material flows and inventories and the quality of the to the three aspects of improved material contiol and             measurement of such flows and inventories should be accounting noted in the beginning of the Discussion              given primary consideration in establishing material section of this guide, i.e., loss location, responsibility        balance areas. Model material balances similar to those assignment, and detection capability. The boundaries              of Appendix A should be prepared to evaluate the selected will depend on combinations of considerations           effects of the selection of various MBAs. Such model of these three items.                                            balances should include all of the material flow, invpntory, and measurement factors thai will affect the Item Control Areas (ICAs)                                        balance. Such factors would include recycle, discards, scrap inventory, random and systematic error effects, ICAs are differentiated from MBAs to simplify and            common measurements and their covariant effect, and improve the control and accountability of identifiable          changes in measurement or inventory quality as a result items. Control into and out of ICAs is required to be by          of division of flows or inventories.
Number of MBAs and ICAs The number of MBAs and ICAs established in a specific plant should be based on considerations of detection capability and the physical and functional aspects of the plant and material that would assist in identifying and localizing material losses or thefts.


item identity and count and previously determined special nuclear material quantities. This excludes items                Material balance areas should provide the maximum that do not have an identity that will differentiate them          practicable detection capability consistent with other from other similar items, e.g., loose fuel pellets or              factors such as physical boundaries or process operation unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM. Such items                  and layout. To improve detection capability, could be substituted for other similar items of different          consideration should be given to changes in such things SNM content or the SNM content changed so that                    as process layout or process operations, physical control of the material would not be maintained.                  boundaries, measurement techniques, and inventory Loaded and sealed fuel rods or tamper-safed sealed                techniques. Consideration also should be given to containers of SNM that have been numbered or in some              establishing procedures for material balances around way uniquely identified provide assurance that the                process segments internal to MBAs.
Different material should be processed in separate MBAs.


quantity of contained SNM remains as previously measured. ICAs for the handling and storage of such                Number of MBAs and 1Cas items provide control without the need for making additional measurements for material balances. Storage                  The number of MBAs and ICAs established in a areas for finished fuel rods or assemblies, process                si ecific plant should be based on considerations of intermediates, or irradiated fuel assemblies could be              detection capability and the physical and functional ICAs. Shipping and receiving areas could be considered            aspects of the plant and material that would assist in ICAs if item integrity is maintained in those areas.              identifying and localizing material losses or thefts.
The establishment of separate processes as separate MBAs should be considered. Although detection capabil ity may not thereby be improved, the identification and location of losses or thefts would be. Even when separate processes are not maintained as separate MBAs, separate material balances should be taken around each process to identify and locate losses and possibly to enhance detection capability.


==C. REGULATORY POSITION==
Functional areas such as laboratories, receiving and shipping areas, and warehouses or storage vaults should be separate MBAs or ICAs. Receiving and shipping areas
Different material should be processed in separate"
5.26-3
                                                                    MBAs.


A variety of factors that are specific for individual plants and processes pertain to the establishment of                    The establishment of separate processes as separate MBAs and ICAs. The effectiveness of the MBAs and                   MBAs should be considered. Although detection ICAs in enhancing nuclear material control should be               capability may not thereby be improved, the evaluated for each situation. The factors presented                identification and location of losses or thefts would be.
may be established as ICAs provided the material is not processed or subdivided and is identifiable by item and in a sealed, tamper-safed condition. Warehouses and storage vaults should be considered ICAs since all material in storage should be identifiable by item and in a sealed, tamper-safed condition.


below should be considered in the selection and                   Even when separate processes are not tnaintained as establishment of MBAs and ICAs.                                    separate MBAs, separate material balances should be taken around each process to identify and locate losses Physical Boundaries                                                and possibly to enhance detection capability.
Item Control Areas Areas designated as ICAs should contain only items that are identified to differentiate them from other similar items and are in a sealed tamper-safed condition that ensures the integrity of prior measurements. Such items as loose fuel pellets or unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM do not have identities that will differentiate them from other similar items and are therefore not acceptable for control in ICAs.


Physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs should be                      Functional areas such as laboratories, receiving and established so that control of the material moving into,          shipping areas, and warehouses or storage vaults should
==D. IMPLEMENTATION==
                                                              5.26-3
This section provides information to applicants and licensees regarding the NRC staff's plans for using this regulatory guide.


be separate MBAs or ICAs. Receiving and shipping areas          Item Control Areas may be established as ICAs provided the material is not processed or subdivided and is identifiable by item and              Areas designated as ICAs should contain only items in a scaled, tamper.safed condition. Warehouses and              that are identified to differentiate them from other storage vaults should be considered ICAs since all              similar items and are in a sealed tamper-safed condition material in storage should be identifiable by item and in       that assures the integrity of prior measurements. Such a sealed, tamper-safed condition.                                items as loose fuel pellets or unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM do not have identities that will differentiate them from other similar items and are therefore not acceptable for control in ICAs.
Except in those cases in which the applicant or licensee proposes an alternative method for complying with specified portions of the Commission's regulations, the methods described herein will be used in the evaluation .of submittals for license applications or amendments to existing licences docketed after publi cation of this guide.


I
5.26-4
                                                              5.26-4 Ill


APPENDIX A
APPENDIX A
                  EFFECT OF MBA SELECTION ON LEMUF AND DETECTION.CAPABILITY
EFFECT OF MBA SELECTION ON LEMUF AND DETECTION CAPABILITY
        To show the effect of MBA selection on the                 Case I-Inventory-Dominated Process, Total Plant MBA
To show the effect of MBA selection on the LEMUF and the detection capability, several examples are presented. The examples are given for a simplified plant consisting of two conversion lines and two fabrication lines. The plant may be represented by the following diagram:
  LEMUF and the detection capability, several examples are presented. The examples are given for a simplified               Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
where:
  plant consisting of two conversion lines and two                         250 kg+/- 500 g fabrication lines. The plant may be represented by the               Input and Output each:
C1 & C2 = Conversion lines 1 and 2 F1 & F2 = Fabrication lines I and 2 The MBAs used in the example will be:
  following diagram:                                                        30 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 60 kg +/- 27.4 g LEMUF = 2(27.4)2 + 2(500)2 =+/-708 g
Thtal Plant - All lines in one MBA
                      -    C,        C2 The single total plant MBA detection capability is therefore +/-708 grams.
Parallel MBAs- MBA I = C1 + F,
-MBA2=C 2 +F 2 Series MBAs - MBA 1 = CI + C2
-MBA2=Fl +F 2 The examples will consider these configurations for both inventory-dominated and throughput-dominated processes. The following parameters are common to all examples:
1. Throughput is in 2-kg batches (Cases I, II, and IHI) or 20-kg batches (Cases IV, V, and VI) each of which is measured to +/-0.25% (+/-5 grams and +/-50 grams respectively). 
2. For simplification, it is assumed that there are no discards and that there is 100% yield in the form of product batches equal in size to the input batches and measured to +/-0.25%. 
3. The inventory interval is two months.
 
4. Beginning and ending inventories are the same size but do not contain any common items or material.
 
5. The total plant inventory is measured to +/-0.2%
and distributed so that when one-half is measured in a single MBA, it is measured to about +/-0.28%. 
6. For simplification, only random errors have been considered. In a real situation, both systematic and random errors would need to be considered.
 
7. For simplification, it has been assumed that there are no common measurements contributing covari ance effects. In real situations, such covariance effects would need to be considered.
 
Case I-Inventory-Dominated Process, Total Plant MBA
Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
250 kg +/- 500 g Input and Output each:  
30 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 60 kg +/- 27.4 g LEMUF = V 2(27.4) 2 + 2(500)2 = +/-708 g The single total plant MBA detection capability is therefore +/-708 grams.


F,        F2 Case Il-Inventory-Dominated Process, Parallel MBAs.
Case II-Inventory-Dominated Process, Parallel MBAs.


where:                                                          For each MBA:
For each MBA:  
                                                                        Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
Beginning and Ending Inventories each:  
        C1 & C2 = Conversion lines I and 2                                  125 kg+/- 354g                    /
125 kg +/- 354 g Input and Output each:  
        F, & F2 = Fabrication lines 1 and 2                            Input and Output each:
15 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 30 kg +/- 19.5 g LEMUF = V/2(19.5)2 + 2(354)2 = +/-501 g The detection capability has been improved from  
                                                                            15 batches @2 kg +/- 5 g = 30 kg+/- 19.5 g The MBAs used in the example will be:
708 grams for the single total plant MBA to 501 grams for each MBA. That is, a loss or theft of 501 grams in either MBA would have the same probability of being detected as a loss of 708 grams in the single total plant MBA.
                                                                        LEMUF = -,2(9    9.5) +2(354)2 = +/-501 Total Plant - All lines in one MBA
                                                                        The detection capability has been improved from Parallel MBAs - MBA I = C1 + F,                            708 grams for the single total plant MBA to 501 grams
                        -MBA 2 =C 2 + F 2                          for each MBA. That is, a loss or theft of 501 grams in either MBA would have the same probability of being Series MBAs - MBA I = C, + C2                              detected as a loss of 708 grams in the single total plant
                      -MBA2=F, + F2                                MBA.


The examples will consider these configurations for            The total plant LEMUF for the two parallel MBAs both inventory-dominated and throLllhput-dominated              would'be +/-501       2 = +/-708 grams, the same as the processes. The following parameters are common to all            single total plant MBA LEMUF. This is because no examples:                                                        additional measurements were made, none of the measurements were improved by dividing the plant into
The total plant LEMUF for the two parallel MBAs would be +/-501 Vr2'= +/-708 grams, the same as the single total plant MBA LEMUF. This is because no additional measurements were made, none of the measurements were improved by dividing the plant into two MBAs, and there were nocommon transfers between the MBAs.
  1. Throughput is in 2-kg batches (Cases I, I1,and III) or      two MBAs, and there were no common transfers
  2"-kg batches (Cases IV, V, and VI) each of which is            between the MBAs.


measured to +/-0.25% (+/-5 grams and +/-50 grams, respectively).                                                  Case III-Inventory-Dominated Process, Series MBAs.
Case Ill-Inventory-Dominated Process, Series MBAs.


2. Fbr simplification it is assumed that there are no discards and that there is 100% yield in the form of                  For each MBA:
For each MBA:  
  product batches equal in size to the input batches and                Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
Beginning and Ending Inventories each:  
  measured to +/-0.25%.                                                        125 kg +/-354 g
125 kg +/- 354 g Input and Output each:  
  3. The inventory interval is two months.                              Input and Output each:
30 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 60 kg +/- 27.4 g LEMUF = /2(27.4)2 + 2(354)2 = 502 g The detection capability for Case III is essentially the same as for the individual parallel MBAs (Case II). 
  4. Beginning and ending inventories are the same size                      30 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 60 kg +/- 27.4 g but do not contain any common items or material.
This would be expected because the inventory domi nates and it is divided in half in each case. The total plant LEMUF does not change, even though there have been additional measurements made, i.e., for the transfer between MBAs. This transfer measurement is assumed to be the same for both MBAs. That is, the output measurement of MBA 1 is the input measurement of MBA 2. When the uncertainties of the two MBAs are
5.26-5


5. The total plant inventory is measured to +/-0.2% and                LEMUF = -/2(27.4)2 + 2(354)2 = 502 g distributed so that when one-half is measured in a single MBA, it is measured to about +/-0.28%.                                The detection capability for Case III is essentially
combined to obtain the total plant MBA uncertainty, this transfer measurement is common and drops out of the equation for the total plant.
  6. For simplification, only random errors have been            the same as for the individual parallel MBAs (Case 11).
  considered. In a real situation both systematic and            This would be expected because the inventory
.no random errors would need to be considered.


7. For simplification it has been assumed that there are common measurements contributing covariance effects. In real situations such covariance effects would need to be considered.
The assumption in this case was that the transfer measurement is as good as the input and product measurements. To the extent that this is not true, the individual MBA LEMUF is increased and the detection capability decreased. This effect becomes more pro nounced .as the absolute uncertainty of the transfer measurement increases. For example, if the uncertainty of the transfer measurement were the same as that of the inventory, i.e., 60 kg +/- 354 grams (3% instead of the previously used 0.25%), the LEMUF of the individual MBAs would be +/-614 grams. There would still be some advantage in dividing the plant into the series MBAs, but not as much as when the transfers between MBAs could be measured with a precision approaching that of the input and product measurements.


dominates and it is divided in half in each case. The total plant LEMUF does not change, even though there have been additional measurements made, i.e., for the transfer between MBAs. This transfer measurement is assumed to be the same for both MBAs. That is, the output
It can be seen from Cases I, II, and III that striking a balance around portions of the inventory will increase the detection capability for each portion, but not for the total plant.
                                                          5.26-5


measurement of MBA I is the input measurement of                     combined LEMUF for the two MIBAs would be +/-')08 MBA 2. When the uncertainties of the two MBAs are                    grams but the MUF (i.e., material stoien) would le 1002 combined to obtain the total plant MBA uncertainty,                  gram!, and probably would trigger an investigAtiin. Th7 this transfer measurement is common and drops out of                  loeatl'or of the loss within thp p!"'lnt in this case n:ay nol'W
In Case I, if an actual loss of 708 grams had occurred, it would be expected that the MUF would exceed the LEMUF of +/-708 grams part of the time. The probability of the MUF exceeding the LEMUF in this case could be calculated. When the MUF exceeds the LEMUF, an alarm is sounded and the high MUF is investigated as occurring somewhere in the total plant.
the equation for tile total plant.                                  be known because the MUF of the individual MBAs may not Lave exceeded the LEMUF.


TFlhe assumpticn in this case was that the transfer measurement is as good as the input and product                      Case IV--Throughput-Doniinated Process. Total Plant measurement s. To thie extent that this is not true, the             MBA
In Cases II and III, the balance is taken around smaller areas so that the detection capability is improved to 502 grams for each area. If a loss or theft of 708 grams were to occur in either area, it would have a higher probability of detection since the LEMUF is only
individual MBA LEMUF is increased and the detection capability decreased. This effect becomes more                              Beginning arid Ending Inventory each:
+/-501 grams. In addition, if such a loss did occur, the area in which it occurred would be shown by the high MUF in that MBA so that the investigation could be confined to the smaller area. In order for a person to steal 708 grams of material with the same probability of success, i.e., being undetected, as in a single total plant MBA, portions of the material would have to be removed from two different MBAs or over a longer period of time in the same MBA. This would expose the thief to an increased probability of detection by the physical protection surveillance and alarm systems.
pronounced as the absolute uncertainty of the transfer                          50 kg +/- 100 g measurement increases. For example, if the uncertainty                      Input and Outptut each:
of the transfer measurement were thie same as that of the                        30 batches 6129 kg +/- 591 g = W00 kg +/- 27- ii inventory, i.e., 60 kg +/- 354 grams (3% instead of thc.


previously used 0.25%) the LEMUF of the individual                          LEMUF = vF2(274)2 + 2(l00)` :+/-        4 3
If a person were to steal 501 grams from each MBA  
                                                                                                                    1 g MIBAs would be +/-614 grams. There would still be sone advantage in dividing the plant into the series MBAs but              Case V --Throughput-Dominated Process, Parallel M, As not as much as when the transfers 1.:1ween MBAs could be measured with a precision approaching that of the                        For each MBA:
of Case II or III, the detection capability would be the same for each MBA as for theft of the 708 grams from the single total plant MBA. The total quantity stolen, however, would be so large that the total theft would have a higher probability of detection upon calculation of the balance for the entire plant. In the example, the combined LEMUF for the two MBAs would be +/-708 grams but the MUF (i.e., material stolen) would be 1002 grams and probably would trigger an investigation. The location of the loss within the plant in this case may not be known because the MUF of the individual MBAs may not have exceeded the LEMUF.
input and produrt measurements.                                            Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
                                                                                25kg +/- 71 g It can he seen froin Cases 1. II, and III that striking a            Input and Output each:
balance around portions of the inventory will increase                          15 batchesV20kg +/- 50g 300 kg +/- 194 g lhe detection capability tor each portion, but not for the total plant.                                                               LEMUF = N[2(1l.4)* 4 2(71)2          2'2 g In Case I, if anl actual loss of 708 grams had                      The individual MBA detection capability has been occurred, it would be expected that the MUF would                     improved from 412 grams to 292_rams. The total plant exceed the LEMLUF of +/-708 grams part of the time. The                LEMUF will not change (9-_2,v2          = +/-413) hecause no probability of the M*UF exceeding tile LEMUF in this                 additional measurements were made nor were anvAdlt case could he calculated. When the MUF exceeds the                   improvements made in the measurement of any of thm LEMUF, an alarm is sounded and the high MUF is                        balance components.


investigated as occurring somewhere in the total plant.
Case IV-Throughput-Dominated Process, Total Plant MBA
Beginning and Ending Inventory each:
50kg_+/- lO0g Input and Output each:
30 batches @ 20 kg +/- 59 g = 600 kg +/- 274 g LEMUF = /2(274)2 + 2(100)2 = +/-413 g Case V-Throughput-Dominated Process, Parallel MBAs For each MBA:
Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
25 kg-+/-71 g Input and Output each:
15 batches @ 20 kg +/- 50 g= 300 kg +/- 194 g LEMUF = f2(194)2 + 2(71)2
+292 g The individual MBA detection capability has been improved from 413 grams to 292 grams. The total plant LEMUF will not change (+/-292 Vr-= +/-413) because no additional measurements were made, nor were any improvements made in the measurement of any of the balance components.


Case VI-Throughput-Dominated Process, Series MBAs In Cases If and II the balance is taken around smaller areas so that the detection capability is improved                  For each MBA:
Case VI-Throughput-Dominated Process, Series MBAs For each MBA:  
                                                                            Beginning and Ending Inventories each:
Beginning and Ending Inventories each:  
to 502 grams for each area. If a loss or theft of 708
25 kg +/-71 g Input and Output each:  
                                                                                25 kg +/- 71 g grams were to occur in either area, it would have a higher probability of detection since the LEMUF is only                    Input and Output each:
30 batches @ 20 kg +/- 50 g = 600 kg +/- 274 g LEMUF = f2(274)2 + 2(71)2 = +/-400 g There has been little gain in the detection capability over a total plant MBA because the throughput is the same for each of the two series MBAs as for a single total plant MBA. The little gain that is realized is due to the gain obtained by dividing the inventory in half. In addition, if the transfer measurement between MBAs in Case VI is not as good as the input and product measurements, there may be a loss of detection capabil ity. For example, if the precision of the transfer measurement for each batch is +/-0.5% instead of +/-0.25%,
+/-501 grams. In addition, if such a loss did occur, the                          30 batches QV20 kg +/- 50 g = 00 kg +/- 27 4 g area in which it occurred would be shown by the high MUF in that MBA so that the investigation could be                          LEMUF = x/2(274)2 + 2(71.)- = a400 g confined to the smaller area. In order for a person to steal 708 grams of material with the same probability of                  There has been little gain in the delvction capabiliy success. i.e., being undetected, as in a single total plant          over a total plant MBA because t0he t.hroughpul is lie MBA, portions of the material would have to be                        same for each of the two ser~es MBAs as t:or a siigl, total plant MBA. The little gain that is realize"\ is due to the removed frmm two different MBAs or over a longer                      gain obtained by dividing the inventory in half. In ad'di- period of time in the same MBA. This would expose the                (ion, if the transfer measurement between MGAs in Case thief to an increased probability of detection by the                VI is not as good as the input and produc; measurements plhysical protection surveillance and alarm systems.
the uncertainty of this total transfer measurement becomes 600 kg +/- 547 grams and the LEMUF for each MBA becomes +/-780 grams. This is a poorer detection capability than the 412 grams for the single total-plant MBA. The effect of this transfer measurement is more pronounced here than in Case III where the inventory dominated.


there may be a loss of detection capability. For example, if the precision of the transfer measurement for each If a person wvere to steal 501 grams from each MBA              batch is +/-0.5% instead of +/-0.25%,, the uncertainty of this of Case II of Ill the detection capability would be the              total transfer measurement becomes 600 kg +/- 547 grams same for each NIBA as for theft of the 708 grams from                and the LEMUF for each MBA becomes +/-780 grams.
5.26.6


the single total plant MBA. The total quantity stolen,               This is a poorer detection capability than the 412 grams however, would he so large that the total theft would                for the single total plant MBA. The effect of this transfer have a higher probability of detection upon calculation              measurement is cuore pronounced here than in Case ll1 of the balance for the entire plant. In-the example, the            where the inventory dominiate
UNITED STATES
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
WASHINGTON, 0. C.


====d.    a====
20555 OFFICIAL BUSINESS
                                                              5.26.6}}
PENALTY FOR PRIVATE USE, $300
POSTAGE AND FEES PAID
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR
REGULATORY COMMISSION}}


{{RG-Nav}}
{{RG-Nav}}

Latest revision as of 02:07, 17 January 2025

Selection of Material Balance Areas & Item Control Areas
ML003740041
Person / Time
Issue date: 04/30/1975
From:
Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research
To:
References
RG-5.26 Rev 1
Download: ML003740041 (7)


U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

REGULATORY GUIDE

OFFICE OF STANDARDS DEVELOPMENT

REGULATORY GUIDE 5.26 SELECTION OF

MATERIAL BALANCE AREAS AND ITEM CONTROL AREAS

A. INTRODUCTION

Section 70.58, "Fundamental Nuclear Material Con trols," of 10 CFR Part 70, "Special Nuclear Material,"

requires certain licensees authorized to possess more than one effective kilogram of special nuclear material to establish Material Balance Areas (MBAs) or Item Control Areas (ICAs) for the physical and administrative control of nuclear materials. This section requires that:

1. Each MBA be an identifiable physical area such that the quantity of nuclear material being moved into or out of the MBA is represented by a measured value.

2. The number of MBAs be sufficient to localize nuclear material losses or thefts and identify the mechanisms.

3. The custody of all nuclear material within an MBA or ICA be the responsibility of a single designated individual.

4. ICAs be established according to the same criteria as MBAs except that control into and out of such areas would be by item identity and count for previously determined special nuclear material quanti ties, the validity of which must be ensured by tamper safing unless the items are sealed sources.

This guide describes bases acceptable to the NRC

staff for the selection of material balance areas and item control areas.

B. DISCUSSION

The division of a nuclear plant into material balance areas and item control areas can provide improved material control and accounting as follows:

1. A loss or theft of material or of an item or items can be identified as having occurred in a particular part

  • Lines indicate substantive changes from previous issue.

of the plant so that the investigation can be more effective and the loss or theft mechanism more easily identified and corrected or counteracted.

2. The assignment of responsibility to a single desig nated individual for the control of the material or the items in each area could provide more vigilant and effective control in each area and thus in the total plant.

3. The capability for detecting the loss or theft of material may be improved by taking smaller material balances.

Number of MBAs and ICAs The number of MBAs and ICAs established at a plant will depend on considerations that are specific to the individual plants. Such considerations will have a bearing on the definition of the word "sufficient" in the Part 70 requirement that the number of MBAs and ICAs be sufficient to localize losses or thefts. It is not the number of MBAs or ICAs per se that will be sufficient to localize losses but the division of the plant into MBAs and ICAs using bases for such division that will permit identification and location of losses. Among the most significant considerations for establishing MBAs are detection capability, physical boundaries, and the organizational structure to provide administrative con trol in each area. Other factors that may pertain include material types, processes and process layout, and func tional locations such as laboratories, shipping and receiving areas, or storage areas.

Each of these factors will affect the selection of MBAs and ICAs and the effectiveness of such selection to control material and items and to identify losses within an area. For example, if an MBA is selected to consist of a building in which there are two processes using different material types (such as two different enrichments of uranium), there may be some difficulty in identifying to which enrichment a MUF should be USNRC REGULATORY GUIDES

Comments should be sent to the Secretary of the Commission. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Washington. D.C. 20555. Attention: Docketing and Regulatory Guides are issued to describe and make available to the public Service Section.

methods acceptable to the NRC staff of implementing specific parts of the Commission's regulations, to delineate techniques used by the staff in evalu, The guides are issued in the following ten broad divisions:

ating specific problems or postulated accidents, or to provide guidance to appli.

cants Regulatory Guides are not substitutes for regulations, and compliance

1. Power Reactors

6. Products with them is not required Methods and solutions different from those set out in

2. Research and Test Reactors

7 Transportation the guides will be acceptable if they provide a basis for the findings requisite to

3 Fuels and Materials Facilities

8 Occupational Health the issuance or continuance of a permit or license by the Commission.

4. Environmental and Siting

9 Antitrust Review Comments and suggestions for improvements in these guides are encouraged

5 Materials and Plant Protection

10 General at all times, and guides will be revised, as appropriate, to accommodate cow mtents and to reflect new information or experience This guide was revised as a Copies of published guides may be obtained by written request indicating the result of substantive commerts received from the public and additional staff divisions desired to the U.S Nuclear Regulatory Commission. Washington. 0 C

review

20555. Attention. Director. Office of Standards Development Revision 1 April 1975

applied. If each process (probably in separate rooms in the building) is established as an MBA, MUFs for each process could be identified, and losses or thefts from each process could be evaluated and investigated as needed. In this case, the process and the material type provided a definition of the MBA. It would not be necessary for different types of material to be used in the two processes for them to be established as separate MBAs. Two parallel processes using the same type of material might be separate MBAs as shown in Cases II

and V in Appendix A. Division also might be made within a process to establish MBAs that would improve detection capability for separate parts of the process.

It may be possible to make the conversion step of a fuel fabrication process a separate MBA with a measured balance around it. The remainder of the process steps (the fabrication steps, pelletizing, sphere formation, alloying, and any other) could constitute another MBA

up to the point where the nuclear material is sealed in a fuel pin, rod, etc. After sealing, the material could be treated as an identifiable item and sent to another area for storage or for further fabrication such as welding, assembly, or testing. Transfer of the items from the MBA would be based on the material quantities as measured when the items were loaded.

If the final fabrication area or storage area receives fuel from more than one loading MBA or is in a separate building on the plant site, it would be designated as an ICA using item identity and the measured quantities from the loading MBAs for control.

It also may be that the conversion step of the process is not administratively separated from the rest of the process so that it could not be considered a separate MBA. This would not preclude a measured balance around that step if the product from the step were measurable before it went into the subsequent step of the process. With proper control of the material to ensure that all is measured once and only once as it moves from process step to process step, measured internal material balances can be taken around process segments whose inputs and outputs are measurable even though separate MBAs may not be established.

Detection Capability The basic objectives of material balance accounting for special nuclear material are to detect the occurrence of missing material whether it be lost or stolen, and conversely to provide assurance with a stated degree of confidence that, if any material is missing, it is less than a threshold quantity. A prime indicator for attaining these objectives is Material Unaccounted For (MUF). The base for evaluation of a MUF value is the Limits of Error of the Material Unaccounted for (LEMUF). If a MUF

value is within the LEMUF value, it can be stated with a specified probability that the MUF is due to uncertain ties of the measurement system. The validity of this statement depends on a number of factors, a major one of which is the validity of the LEMUF itself. The LEMUF provides the limits that define the threshold quantity for a detectable loss or theft. A LEMUF that has been inflated, either intentionally or inadvertently, can mask a loss or theft by indicating that a MUF is not statistically significant, i.e., the MUF is the result only of the measurement error of the system, when in fact the MUF includes a significant loss or theft. The ramifica tions of the evaluation of MUF and the generation of data for MUF and LEMUF are the subjects of other regulatory guides. It is sufficient for the purpose of this guide to know that the combination of a properly generated MUF and LEMUF provides a loss detection mechanism.

In general, the detection capability of MUF and LEMUF varies directly with the quality of the material balance measurements and inversely with the quantity of material in a given balance. In this context, detection capability means the threshold quantity of material that the system can detect as being missing with some stated probability. This capability is represented by a LEMUF

value stated in terms of quantity, e.g., grams or kilograms. This detection capability based on a measured material balance is associated with MBAs rather than ICAs, since ICAs are controlled on an item basis. In an ICA, either all items are accounted for or they are not. If they are not, one or more missing items are indicated, and an investigation is required.

The selection of MBAs can affect detection capabil ity by lowering the quantity of material in a material balance, thereby lowering the absolute LEMUF, since with less material there could be a smaller LEMUF and a greater sensitivity. This assumes that only the quantity of material is changed and not measurement quality.

Examples showing the effect of this quantity change using this assumption are presented in Appendix A of this guide. The examples obviously are simplified greatly. In real situations there would be complicating factors such as discard streams, scrap removals from MBAs, recycle that might cross MBA boundaries, or uneven distribution of inventory or throughput between MBAs, in addition to changes in measurement quality.

Each of these could affect the selection of MBA

boundaries.

Physical Boundaries The physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs are not specified in the proposed regulations except that they must be "identifiable physical areas." The boundaries could be no more than lines painted on the floor around certain parts of the process. However, if MBA or ICA

boundaries do not minimize the possibility of inter mixing of materials or items from different areas, either intentionally or inadvertently, the balance of such an area or the item control for such an area could become meaningless, and the location of a loss or theft' of material or items might not be identifiable. Further.

5.26-2

with boundaries that do not provide physical separation of materials, it is more difficult to discharge the custodial responsibility for a given area. It is too easy for material to be moved without the proper documentation and appropriate transfer of custodial responsibility in such cases. Areas bounded by walls, such as separate buildings or rooms within a building, or by grids, such as a storage crib or a room divider, are well defined and the materials and items can be kept within the areas more easily.

The critical factor is not the physical boundary, but the identification of an area that can be administratively controlled as a separate area around which either measured material balance control or item control can be maintained. This control would be related to the three aspects of improved material control and account ing noted in the beginning of the Discussion section of this guide, i.e., loss location, responsibility assignment, and detection capability. The boundaries selected will depend on combinations of considerations of these three items.

Item Control Areas (ICAs)

ICAs are differentiated from MBAs to simplify and improve the control and accountability of identifiable items. Control into and out of ICAs is required to be by item identity and count and previously determined special nuclear material quantities. This excludes items that do not have an identity that will differentiate them from other similar items, e.g., loose fuel pellets or unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM. Such items could be substituted for other similar items of different SNM content or the SNM content changed so that control of the material would not be maintained.

Loaded and sealed fuel rods or tamper-safed sealed containers of SNM that have been numbered or in some way uniquely identified provide assurance that the quantity of contained SNM

remains as previously measured. ICAs for the handling and storage of such items provide control without the need for making additional measurements for material balances. Storage areas for finished fuel rods or assemblies, process intermediates, or irradiated fuel assemblies could be ICAs. Shipping and receiving areas could be considered ICAs if item integrity is maintained in those areas.

C. REGULATORY POSITION

A variety of factors that are specific for individual plants and processes pertain to the establishment of MBAs and ICAs. The effectiveness of the MBAs and ICAs in enhancing nuclear material control should be evaluated for each situation. The factors presented below should be considered in the selection and estab lishment of MBAs and ICAs.

Physical Boundaries Physical boundaries of MBAs and ICAs should be established so that control of the material moving into, out of, and within the area can be maintained to the extent that material assigned to a given area is kept separate from material assigned to any other area.'.The boundaries of the MBAs must be established so that the quantity of material moving into or out of an area can be represented by a measured value. The boundaries of ICAs must be established so that items moving into or out of an area can be controlled by identity, count, and a previously measured valid special nuclear material content.

Detection Capability Material flows and inventories and the quality of the measurement of such flows and inventories should be given primary consideration in establishing material balance areas. Model material balances similar to those of Appendix A should be prepared to evaluate the effects of the selection of various MBAs. Such model balances should include all of the material flow, inven tory, and measurement factors that will affect the balance. Such factors would include recycle, discards, scrap inventory, random and systematic error effects, common measurements and their covariant effect, and changes in measurement or inventory quality as a result of division of flows or inventories.

Material balance areas should provide the maximum practicable detection capability consistent with other factors such as physical boundaries or process operation and layout. To improve detection capability, considera tion should be given to changes in such things as process layout or process operations, physical boundaries, measurement techniques, and inventory techniques.

Consideration also should be given to establishing procedures for material balances around process seg ments internal to MBAs.

Number of MBAs and ICAs The number of MBAs and ICAs established in a specific plant should be based on considerations of detection capability and the physical and functional aspects of the plant and material that would assist in identifying and localizing material losses or thefts.

Different material should be processed in separate MBAs.

The establishment of separate processes as separate MBAs should be considered. Although detection capabil ity may not thereby be improved, the identification and location of losses or thefts would be. Even when separate processes are not maintained as separate MBAs, separate material balances should be taken around each process to identify and locate losses and possibly to enhance detection capability.

Functional areas such as laboratories, receiving and shipping areas, and warehouses or storage vaults should be separate MBAs or ICAs. Receiving and shipping areas

5.26-3

may be established as ICAs provided the material is not processed or subdivided and is identifiable by item and in a sealed, tamper-safed condition. Warehouses and storage vaults should be considered ICAs since all material in storage should be identifiable by item and in a sealed, tamper-safed condition.

Item Control Areas Areas designated as ICAs should contain only items that are identified to differentiate them from other similar items and are in a sealed tamper-safed condition that ensures the integrity of prior measurements. Such items as loose fuel pellets or unsealed, unlabeled containers of SNM do not have identities that will differentiate them from other similar items and are therefore not acceptable for control in ICAs.

D. IMPLEMENTATION

This section provides information to applicants and licensees regarding the NRC staff's plans for using this regulatory guide.

Except in those cases in which the applicant or licensee proposes an alternative method for complying with specified portions of the Commission's regulations, the methods described herein will be used in the evaluation .of submittals for license applications or amendments to existing licences docketed after publi cation of this guide.

5.26-4

APPENDIX A

EFFECT OF MBA SELECTION ON LEMUF AND DETECTION CAPABILITY

To show the effect of MBA selection on the LEMUF and the detection capability, several examples are presented. The examples are given for a simplified plant consisting of two conversion lines and two fabrication lines. The plant may be represented by the following diagram:

where:

C1 & C2 = Conversion lines 1 and 2 F1 & F2 = Fabrication lines I and 2 The MBAs used in the example will be:

Thtal Plant - All lines in one MBA

Parallel MBAs- MBA I = C1 + F,

-MBA2=C 2 +F 2 Series MBAs - MBA 1 = CI + C2

-MBA2=Fl +F 2 The examples will consider these configurations for both inventory-dominated and throughput-dominated processes. The following parameters are common to all examples:

1. Throughput is in 2-kg batches (Cases I, II, and IHI) or 20-kg batches (Cases IV, V, and VI) each of which is measured to +/-0.25% (+/-5 grams and +/-50 grams respectively).

2. For simplification, it is assumed that there are no discards and that there is 100% yield in the form of product batches equal in size to the input batches and measured to +/-0.25%.

3. The inventory interval is two months.

4. Beginning and ending inventories are the same size but do not contain any common items or material.

5. The total plant inventory is measured to +/-0.2%

and distributed so that when one-half is measured in a single MBA, it is measured to about +/-0.28%.

6. For simplification, only random errors have been considered. In a real situation, both systematic and random errors would need to be considered.

7. For simplification, it has been assumed that there are no common measurements contributing covari ance effects. In real situations, such covariance effects would need to be considered.

Case I-Inventory-Dominated Process, Total Plant MBA

Beginning and Ending Inventories each:

250 kg +/- 500 g Input and Output each:

30 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 60 kg +/- 27.4 g LEMUF = V 2(27.4) 2 + 2(500)2 = +/-708 g The single total plant MBA detection capability is therefore +/-708 grams.

Case II-Inventory-Dominated Process, Parallel MBAs.

For each MBA:

Beginning and Ending Inventories each:

125 kg +/- 354 g Input and Output each:

15 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 30 kg +/- 19.5 g LEMUF = V/2(19.5)2 + 2(354)2 = +/-501 g The detection capability has been improved from

708 grams for the single total plant MBA to 501 grams for each MBA. That is, a loss or theft of 501 grams in either MBA would have the same probability of being detected as a loss of 708 grams in the single total plant MBA.

The total plant LEMUF for the two parallel MBAs would be +/-501 Vr2'= +/-708 grams, the same as the single total plant MBA LEMUF. This is because no additional measurements were made, none of the measurements were improved by dividing the plant into two MBAs, and there were nocommon transfers between the MBAs.

Case Ill-Inventory-Dominated Process, Series MBAs.

For each MBA:

Beginning and Ending Inventories each:

125 kg +/- 354 g Input and Output each:

30 batches @ 2 kg +/- 5 g = 60 kg +/- 27.4 g LEMUF = /2(27.4)2 + 2(354)2 = 502 g The detection capability for Case III is essentially the same as for the individual parallel MBAs (Case II).

This would be expected because the inventory domi nates and it is divided in half in each case. The total plant LEMUF does not change, even though there have been additional measurements made, i.e., for the transfer between MBAs. This transfer measurement is assumed to be the same for both MBAs. That is, the output measurement of MBA 1 is the input measurement of MBA 2. When the uncertainties of the two MBAs are

5.26-5

combined to obtain the total plant MBA uncertainty, this transfer measurement is common and drops out of the equation for the total plant.

The assumption in this case was that the transfer measurement is as good as the input and product measurements. To the extent that this is not true, the individual MBA LEMUF is increased and the detection capability decreased. This effect becomes more pro nounced .as the absolute uncertainty of the transfer measurement increases. For example, if the uncertainty of the transfer measurement were the same as that of the inventory, i.e., 60 kg +/- 354 grams (3% instead of the previously used 0.25%), the LEMUF of the individual MBAs would be +/-614 grams. There would still be some advantage in dividing the plant into the series MBAs, but not as much as when the transfers between MBAs could be measured with a precision approaching that of the input and product measurements.

It can be seen from Cases I, II, and III that striking a balance around portions of the inventory will increase the detection capability for each portion, but not for the total plant.

In Case I, if an actual loss of 708 grams had occurred, it would be expected that the MUF would exceed the LEMUF of +/-708 grams part of the time. The probability of the MUF exceeding the LEMUF in this case could be calculated. When the MUF exceeds the LEMUF, an alarm is sounded and the high MUF is investigated as occurring somewhere in the total plant.

In Cases II and III, the balance is taken around smaller areas so that the detection capability is improved to 502 grams for each area. If a loss or theft of 708 grams were to occur in either area, it would have a higher probability of detection since the LEMUF is only

+/-501 grams. In addition, if such a loss did occur, the area in which it occurred would be shown by the high MUF in that MBA so that the investigation could be confined to the smaller area. In order for a person to steal 708 grams of material with the same probability of success, i.e., being undetected, as in a single total plant MBA, portions of the material would have to be removed from two different MBAs or over a longer period of time in the same MBA. This would expose the thief to an increased probability of detection by the physical protection surveillance and alarm systems.

If a person were to steal 501 grams from each MBA

of Case II or III, the detection capability would be the same for each MBA as for theft of the 708 grams from the single total plant MBA. The total quantity stolen, however, would be so large that the total theft would have a higher probability of detection upon calculation of the balance for the entire plant. In the example, the combined LEMUF for the two MBAs would be +/-708 grams but the MUF (i.e., material stolen) would be 1002 grams and probably would trigger an investigation. The location of the loss within the plant in this case may not be known because the MUF of the individual MBAs may not have exceeded the LEMUF.

Case IV-Throughput-Dominated Process, Total Plant MBA

Beginning and Ending Inventory each:

50kg_+/- lO0g Input and Output each:

30 batches @ 20 kg +/- 59 g = 600 kg +/- 274 g LEMUF = /2(274)2 + 2(100)2 = +/-413 g Case V-Throughput-Dominated Process, Parallel MBAs For each MBA:

Beginning and Ending Inventories each:

25 kg-+/-71 g Input and Output each:

15 batches @ 20 kg +/- 50 g= 300 kg +/- 194 g LEMUF = f2(194)2 + 2(71)2

+292 g The individual MBA detection capability has been improved from 413 grams to 292 grams. The total plant LEMUF will not change (+/-292 Vr-= +/-413) because no additional measurements were made, nor were any improvements made in the measurement of any of the balance components.

Case VI-Throughput-Dominated Process, Series MBAs For each MBA:

Beginning and Ending Inventories each:

25 kg +/-71 g Input and Output each:

30 batches @ 20 kg +/- 50 g = 600 kg +/- 274 g LEMUF = f2(274)2 + 2(71)2 = +/-400 g There has been little gain in the detection capability over a total plant MBA because the throughput is the same for each of the two series MBAs as for a single total plant MBA. The little gain that is realized is due to the gain obtained by dividing the inventory in half. In addition, if the transfer measurement between MBAs in Case VI is not as good as the input and product measurements, there may be a loss of detection capabil ity. For example, if the precision of the transfer measurement for each batch is +/-0.5% instead of +/-0.25%,

the uncertainty of this total transfer measurement becomes 600 kg +/- 547 grams and the LEMUF for each MBA becomes +/-780 grams. This is a poorer detection capability than the 412 grams for the single total-plant MBA. The effect of this transfer measurement is more pronounced here than in Case III where the inventory dominated.

5.26.6

UNITED STATES

NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION

WASHINGTON, 0. C.

20555 OFFICIAL BUSINESS

PENALTY FOR PRIVATE USE, $300

POSTAGE AND FEES PAID

UNITED STATES NUCLEAR

REGULATORY COMMISSION